Report sounds alarm on China's rerouting of US internet traffic

A report submitted to Congress on Wednesday by the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission expressed concerns over what the commission claims is China's growing ability to control and manipulate Internet traffic.

The report points to two specific incidents that happened earlier this year where actions taken inside China had a direct impact on Internet traffic in the U.S. and other regions of the world.

In one of the incidents, traffic to and from about 15 percent of all internet destinations was routed through servers belonging to China Telecom, a state-owned telecommunications company.

The rerouting happened on April 8 and lasted for about 18 minutes. The traffic hijacking impacted US government and military networks including those belonging to the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corp., the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Department of Commerce, NASA and the US Senate.

Commercial sites including those belonging to Microsoft, Dell and Yahoo were also impacted.

It's unclear if Chinese telecommunications firms did anything with the hijacked data, the commission said in its report. But the kind of access that Chinese authorities had to the data could enable surveillance of specific users or sites, disrupt transactions, prevent a user from establishing connections to specific sites or divert them to other spoofed sites, the report noted.

"Incidents of this nature could have a number of serious implications," the report said.

The second incident mentioned in the report involved a more widely reported , botched attempt by Chinese authorities to block users inside China from accessing sites such as Twitter , YouTube, and Facebook .

Because of a network error, users in the U.S. and Chile also found themselves being unable to access the sites, and being directed to incorrect servers as they would have if they had been inside China.

Today's report makes it clear that there is little evidence to show that either incident was planned or executed deliberately. Even so, the incidents show that China and other countries have the capability to do so, if they wanted.

"Although China is by no means alone in this regard, persistent reports of that nation's use of malicious computer activities raise questions about whether China might seek intentionally to leverage these abilities to assert some level of control over the Internet, even for a brief period," the report noted.

Incidents such as those reported by the commission highlight some of the fundamental vulnerabilities of the Internet, said Dmitri Alperovitch, an Internet threat researcher with McAfee.

Traffic flow on the Internet is enabled by routing servers, which essentially exchange information with each other on the best routes for traffic to take to get to a particular Internet destination. Each server implicitly trusts the information provided by other servers in the system.

The Internet hijacking incident of April 8 resulted when China Telecom's servers erroneously started advertising themselves as the best routes for a large chunk of Internet traffic. Such rerouting has happened before from simple configuration errors, though it can certainly be caused by deliberate actions as well.

There is no way of knowing for sure whether the April incident was done with malicious intent or was caused by accident as China Telecom has suggested, Alperovitch said.

"The takeaway here is that the foundation on which the Internet is built is insecure," Alperovitch said. "It is based on trust. We trust ISPs to tell us which networks they own. There is no validation [of the information.]"

"Not only can this problem happen again, but it probably will," he said.

With most routing errors, traffic is either dropped or misdirected, said Craig Labovitz, chief technology officer at Arbor Networks. Even a single misplaced line of code in a core router can resulting in wrong routing information being propagated through the Internet and cause all sorts of problems, he said.

"The underlying plumbing relies on trust," Labovitz said. "You got a lot of different telecoms all telling each other what address space they have and what they can reach. You believe what address space they have and you send traffic to them."

This is not the first time the commission has raised Internet security concerns related to China. In a similar report last year, it noted that China was using its maturing network exploitation capabilities to leach intelligence information from the U.S. government, military and industry.

"The problem is characterized by disciplined, standardized operations, sophisticated techniques, access to high-end software development resources, a deep knowledge of the targeted networks, and an ability to sustain activities," the earlier report had noted.

Copyright 2018 IDG Communications. ABN 14 001 592 650. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of IDG Communications is prohibited.